WND EXCLUSIVE

CNN producer: Trump 'f---ing crazy,' voters stupid

Bob Unruh joined WND in 2006 after nearly three decades with the Associated Press, as well as several Upper Midwest newspapers, where he covered everything from legislative battles and sports to tornadoes and homicidal survivalists. He is also a photographer whose scenic work has been used commercially.

Editor’s Note: Be aware that this report, particularly in videos, include very offensive language.

A CNN producer has been caught on video saying President Trump is crazy and American voters are stupid.

Jimmy Carr, an associate producer for the “New Day” morning program on the network labeled “fake news” by President Trump, was recorded by undercover operatives for James O’Keefe’s Project Veritas. The organization is doing a series of videos on American media called “American Pravda.”

When asked by an undercover journalist if CNN is impartial, Carr plainly responded, “In theory.”

Carr also said, about President Trump: “We all recognize he is a clown, that he is hilariously unqualified for this, he’s really bad at this and that he does not have America’s best interests. We recognized he’s just f—— crazy.”

Carr continued, regarding Trump: “This is a man who’s not actually a Republican. He’s not actually a Republican. He just adopted that because that was the party he thought he could win in. He doesn’t believe anything that these people believe. The man’s on this third wife. I guarantee you he’s paid for abortions. He doesn’t give a s— about abortion. He doesn’t care about gay marriage. He doesn’t even really care about the budget.”

And he claims he’s not alone in his opinions: “Ninety percent of us are on board with just the fact that he’s crazy.”

O’Keefe’s video also charges that the show for which Carr works selectively edits interviews to make Trump look bad.

The Carr video was the third in the Project Veritas series.

In No. 2, Van Jones, former President Obama’s onetime “czar” on green jobs and a longtime left-wing commentator, activist and organizer, agreed with President Trump that the Russia scandal is “a big nothing burger.”

The video clip shows Jones being approached on a street and stating in response to a question, “The Russian thing is just a big nothing burger.”

“If you take any one line of my argument out of context, you can use it to pull off a hoax. That’s what O’Keefe’s minions did,” Jones wrote in a CNN article.

In the video that opened the series, another CNN producer admitted the network’s focus on allegations that Trump’s election campaign colluded with Russia is mostly for ratings. The producer said the network’s mostly liberal audience would not have put up with that kind of treatment of Obama.

The first video was of CNN producer John Bonifield, and his comments drew the attention of the White House.

Deputy Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said: “There is a video circulating now. Whether it is accurate or not, I don’t know, but I would encourage everybody in this room, and frankly, everybody across the country to take a look at it. I think if it is accurate, I think it’s a disgrace to all of media, to all of journalism – we’ve been going on this Russia-Trump hoax for the better part of a year now with no evidence of anything.”

O’Keefe’s video of Bonifield shows him saying, “I think there are a lot of liberal CNN viewers who want to see Trump really get scrutinized.”

The network later issued a statement that it stood by Bonifield.

The producer said in the video: “And I think if we would have behaved that way with President Obama, and scrutinized everything that he was doing with as much scrutiny as we applied to Donald Trump, I think our viewers would have been turned off.

“I think they would have felt like we were attacking him. I think our viewers right now, I’m not saying our viewers are super liberals, I think there’s just a lot of them, and … Trump is good for business right now.”

Project Veritas, famous for its undercover videos exposing media and political corruption, went to CNN’s Atlanta headquarters for the conversations with Bonifield.

The CNN producer admitted there’s no evidence to support the allegations of links between Trump’s campaign and Russia.

“It’s mostly bullsh– right now, like, we don’t have any big giant proof,” he said. “I just feel like they don’t really have it but they want to keep digging.

“And so I think the president is probably right to say, like, look, you are witch-hunting me,” he continued. “Like, you have no smoking gun. You have no real proof.”

He said CNN CEO Jeff Zucker praised the crew for its coverage of the climate-accord issue, but then said, “We’re done with it, let’s get back to Russia.”

Explained Bonifield: “It’s a business. People are like the media has an ethical … all the nice cutesy little ethics that used to get talked about in journalism school, you’re just like, that’s adorable. That’s adorable.

“This is a business. Especially cable news. Cable news isn’t the New York Times. It’s not even like NBC News. … I mean, NBC News still gets 20 million viewers a night, cable news is getting a million.”

He continued: “They got to do what they got to do to make their money, I think. And so I love the news business, but I’m very cynical about it and at the same time so are most of my colleagues.”

Regarding Russia, he said, if there’s was evidence somewhere, it would soon be known.

“The way these leaks happen, they’d leak it. It’d leak. If it was something really good, it would leak,” he said.

“In the aftermath of the retraction of a story published on CNN.com, CNN has accepted the resignation of the employees involved in the story’s publication,” a network spokesperson told TheWrap in a statement.

The story, by reporter Thomas Frank, concerned an investigation into an investment fund in Russia “with possible ties to several Trump associates.”

CNN said its editorial processes were not followed.

The story had been based on a single anonymous source.

At the time, Trump ally Anthony Scaramucci, who was identified in the story, responded that he did “nothing wrong.”

Out of work were Frank, editor Eric Lichtblau and unit chief Lex Haris.

Zucker just a few days earlier told PageSix: “CNN has been around for 37 years, our trustworthiness today is the same as it was a year ago, before people in high offices started questioning it. We know that through our own brand research. Just because somebody says you are not trustworthy, that doesn’t mean it is so … CNN’s brand equity is built over 37 years doing hard work in very dangerous places … those who rely on CNN trust CNN more than ever.”